Angelika
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She Said Her Fiance Died In A Kayaking Accident. Now She Has Pleaded Guilty In His Death
- Tuesday July 25, 2017
- World News | Alex Horton, The Washington Post
A woman who in 2015 told police her fiance died in a kayaking accident in the Hudson River pleaded guilty Monday to criminal negligent homicide, officials said.
- www.ndtv.com
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German Couple Lured Women To 'Horror House' With Dating Ads, Tortured Them To Death, Police Say
- Saturday October 29, 2016
- World News | Travis M. Andrews, The Washington Post
For years, 46-year-old Wilfried W. and his 47-year-old now ex-wife Angelika inhabited the storybook home. And for years, they allegedly lured women into the home, where they tortured them in such grisly and abominable ways that local media dubbed the place the "horror house in Hoexter."
- www.ndtv.com
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Mind-Controlled Computers in the Offing
- Thursday October 22, 2015
- Health | Press Trust of India
Scientists have been able to predict human movements just by analysing a person's brain activity, an advance that could pave the way for computers which can be controlled with our mind.
- www.ndtv.com
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She Said Her Fiance Died In A Kayaking Accident. Now She Has Pleaded Guilty In His Death
- Tuesday July 25, 2017
- World News | Alex Horton, The Washington Post
A woman who in 2015 told police her fiance died in a kayaking accident in the Hudson River pleaded guilty Monday to criminal negligent homicide, officials said.
- www.ndtv.com
-
German Couple Lured Women To 'Horror House' With Dating Ads, Tortured Them To Death, Police Say
- Saturday October 29, 2016
- World News | Travis M. Andrews, The Washington Post
For years, 46-year-old Wilfried W. and his 47-year-old now ex-wife Angelika inhabited the storybook home. And for years, they allegedly lured women into the home, where they tortured them in such grisly and abominable ways that local media dubbed the place the "horror house in Hoexter."
- www.ndtv.com
-
Mind-Controlled Computers in the Offing
- Thursday October 22, 2015
- Health | Press Trust of India
Scientists have been able to predict human movements just by analysing a person's brain activity, an advance that could pave the way for computers which can be controlled with our mind.
- www.ndtv.com